You get what you pay for
There is a meme going around Facebook that chides employed individuals for saying expressions like “That’s not my job.”
There is a meme going around Facebook that chides employed individuals for saying expressions like “That’s not my job.”
The weaponization of fear has become the new normal, with both sides of a hidden war embracing a deadly virus as their flag. The left, the right, the conservatives, the progressives, QAnon and Antifa have more in common than dissension.
As I scrolled through Facebook, the vows to “Never Forget” memes that are ever-present in the month of September fill my feed.
A Gallup poll in 2019 indicated that two-thirds of Americans oppose giving Washington D.C. statehood. A new bill could change that.
Senator Mitt Romney’s Family Security Act aims to support families by providing direct monthly payments up to $1,200 per month.
Social media has significantly influenced communication on issues of importance. The freedom of invisibility allows many ‘keyboard warriors’ to speak their truth without accountability.
By providing unemployed Americans with an increase in their benefits, the federal government reopened the debate on minimum wage by adding an additional $600 to unemployed which allowed some Americans to live within the range of a living wage.
President Donald Trump’s use of Twitter has dramatically altered the flow of public information about White House policy and procedures. With 66.9 million followers, the president can communicate directly with his audience across the political spectrum, bypassing traditional media channels.